Comments on: Podcast 34: The roles of the client and the web designerhttps://boagworld.com/classic-show/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer/
Advice on user experience design and digital strategy from Paul BoagSun, 02 Aug 2015 02:37:00 +0000hourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.2By: lizahttps://boagworld.com/classic-show/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer/#comment-1406
Wed, 10 Jan 2007 17:45:42 +0000http://wpboagworld:83/uncategorized/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer#comment-1406i must say If you are a designer: –
– Don’t bullshit your clients. If you can’t do it, and will outsource, tell them. They might still go with you if you can find them the right person!
– If you do outsource, at least keep an active involvement in the project.
– Pay careful attention to the contract and ensure that you know exactly what is expected of you. If there are variations, and there will be (we paid probably as much as the contract again in variations), make sure they are clear in the contract.
– If you do get things wrong, take it as a learning experience.http://www.naturalherbalproducts.bravehost.com
]]>By: Deepak Sahnihttps://boagworld.com/classic-show/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer/#comment-1405
Wed, 22 Nov 2006 10:34:19 +0000http://wpboagworld:83/uncategorized/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer#comment-1405Really useful to make some very irritating clients understand the concept behind keeping their websites with less images, most of the clients gets happy to see their competitor websites in flash but don’t understand its negative impact on search engine and when as company we try to convince they feel that we are unable to do the work in flash hence making excuses, ultimately such people has be left till the time they their self realize the point.
]]>By: john becks teleseminarshttps://boagworld.com/classic-show/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer/#comment-1404
Tue, 14 Nov 2006 05:03:47 +0000http://wpboagworld:83/uncategorized/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer#comment-1404Always consider the bottom line and whether additional functionality will generate a return on investment. Not every “good idea” from others will enhance your website.
]]>By: Simonhttps://boagworld.com/classic-show/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer/#comment-1403
Sat, 15 Jul 2006 06:00:55 +0000http://wpboagworld:83/uncategorized/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer#comment-1403I am just catching up on podcasts so have listened to this one a bit late, and thought I would share my web developers horror story with you. It is a bit of a rant, but hey, you are probably used to that!
We had a flash configurator developed for our racking systems, and went out to tender locally in the Brisbane area of Australia. We did this by producing a 40 page document detailing exactly what we expected the application to do, and showing the interface we wanted at various stages of its functionality.
The first time we went out we got the best deal from a company in the middle of Brisbane, who’s name escapes me for the moment. We prepared the contract, went in for signing it over and they said that they had decided to double to price as they had been taken over by someone else. I obviously told them to stick this where the sun don’t shine, and went out to tender again.
Second time around we were most impressed with a company called WebGraf-X who showed a similar application they had done before, and came in at the best price…a winning combination. When we went in the sign the contract, there was the guy I had dealt with before, and another guy who I assumed worked for them. After some discussion I realised that in fact he didn’t work for them, he was in fact a free lancer. Seemed fine though as I assumed that he may do the interface and WebGraf-X the back end.
What actually happened is that WebGraf-X basically did none of it, and palmed the whole lot onto what I know know as Cognitia studios, a small local developer, via another intermediate agency. Still okay with that though, as they found the right guy for the job, either by skill or accident.
Recently though the main part of the configurator has been finished, and WebGraf-X requested the final payment. However they had not completed a secondary part which was clearly detailed in the contract for a ‘room configuration system’. I asked them to quote on a slightly upgraded version of this and they passed on a quote for the whole lot, not just changes. At this point we said, that we would go back to what was detailed in the quote, and as per our contract expected it to be finished in 28 days or the contract would be void, and we wouldn’t pay the final invoice.
They waited 27 days before sending us a letter saying basically that they saw the contract and being complete, and we should have known that the room configuration bit was separate, and demanding final payment.
All this time the actual developer, who I have the greatest of respect for is stuck in the middle, having to pay to keep programmers on waiting for a go ahead, so struggling financially.
The moral of this story is: –
If you are a client: –
– Make sure the developer is actually a developer, and will not just outsource it, which you could as easily do yourself.
– Make sure if you are shown something similar to what you want that the developer actually did it.
– Make sure that your contract is crystal clear and what you expect to happen before each stage payment.
– Don’t do what we did and treat any part of the project as a bit of a sideline, or the developer may use it as an excuse to treat it as something totally separate.
If you are a designer: –
– Don’t bullshit your clients. If you can’t do it, and will outsource, tell them. They might still go with you if you can find them the right person!
– If you do outsource, at least keep an active involvement in the project.
– Pay careful attention to the contract and ensure that you know exactly what is expected of you. If there are variations, and there will be (we paid probably as much as the contract again in variations), make sure they are clear in the contract.
– If you do get things wrong, take it as a learning experience!
]]>By: Marchttps://boagworld.com/classic-show/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer/#comment-1402
Thu, 22 Jun 2006 23:31:09 +0000http://wpboagworld:83/uncategorized/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer#comment-1402You are right that there needs to be a greater emphasis on the client having a large impact on the success of their web site.
]]>By: Edhttps://boagworld.com/classic-show/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer/#comment-1401
Wed, 17 May 2006 01:05:56 +0000http://wpboagworld:83/uncategorized/podcast-34-the-roles-of-the-client-and-the-web-designer#comment-1401Funny, I thought in the techno-buster that Paul said he test his sites with “Jesus”, but after thinking about it, I’m pretty sure he said “end users”.
Anyway, I’ve made An image + tagline for a t-shirt that you might like to look at.
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